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Losing Ground
Forced Evictions and Intimidation
in Cambodia
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Frequently used acronyms
ADHOC The Cambodian Human Rights and Development Association
CLEC Community Legal Education Center
LAC Legal Aid of Cambodia
LICADHO Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights
Photos
Front cover from left: A boy prepares for a ceremony to mark Childrens Day at
Andong relocation site (see page 74). Police fire teargas during the forced eviction of Dey
Krahom in January 2009 (see pages 31-36). A resident of Chrouy Sna village who walked
from Battambang province to the prime ministers estate to seek his intervention in one of
Cambodias longest-running land disputes (see pages 7-12).
Back cover: An unidentified police officer photographs residents near Phnom Penhs Boeng
Kak Lake during a discussion about rumors they faced eviction, on February 10, 2008.
The Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC) is a coalition of 21 NGO
members. It was created in Phnom Penh in 1994 by a group of local NGOs and associations
working for the promotion and the respect of human rights, democracy and rule of law in
Cambodia.
September 2009.
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Losing Ground: Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
The Lake
Sharing Ground?
The Long March: Battambang
Maybe We Will Walk Again
New Year Bullet
Sugar Cane Concession: Koh Kong
Fighting Back with Hand-painted Signs
Killing Livestock and Livelihoods
Coastal Eviction: Preah Sihanouk
Burning Bridges in Preah Sihanouk
Beaten then Jailed
Vanishing Forests: Pursat and Kampong Chhnang
Concession Looms Over Two Provinces
Thumbprints to Prison
Shock at Dawn: Phnom Penh
Dreams Dashed, Residents Betrayed
Nothing Left
Rubber Plantation: Kratie
Living in Fear
Unwritten Rules
Crackdown: Siem Reap
Dash for Safety
What Law did I break?
Enter the New Year
Muddy RiversOn the Border
Community Complaints
Appendices
Cambodias Land Law
Indigenous Community Lands
Dispute Mechanisms
Background to Crackdown
Childrens Day at Andong
4
6
7
13
19
25
31
37
43
49
5255
57
65
70
71
72
74
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Many poor and marginalized communitiesare living in fear of the institutions created to
protect them, in particular the police and the
courts. As forced evictions increase, public space
for discussing them is shrinking.
The day before we released our report Rights Razed:Forced Evictions in Cambodia in February 2008, I metwith residents of a community on Boeng Kak Lake inPhnom Penh to discuss news that the lake would be turnedinto a landfill and as many as 4,200 families relocated tothe outskirts of the city to make way for development.
Police and commune officials tried to stop our gatheringon February 10, 2008 incorrectly arguing we neededformal permission. After a brief stand-off, they allowedus to proceed, but one policeman hovered around us,
photographing everyone present and tape recording ourdiscussion. But instead of recording peoples concernsso that they could be used by policy-makers andgovernment officials, the tape recorder turned into a toolof intimidation.
This is a very minor incident. As shown in this report,harassment of local activists in Cambodia, includingdefenders of the right to housing, is widespread.Cambodias rich and powerful are increasingly abusing thecriminal justice system to silence communities standingup against land concessions or business deals affecting the
land they live on or cultivate.Many poor and marginalized communities are living
in fear of the institutions created to protect them, in
Losing Ground
Left: An unidentied police ofcer attempts to prevent a
gathering of residents and housing rights activists at Phnom
Penhs Boeng Kak Lake on February 10, 2008, the day before
Amnesty International released a report warning that about
150,000 Cambodians were at risk of eviction.
Right: One policeman hovered around us, photographing
all present and tape recording our discussion. But instead
of recording peoples concerns so that they could be used by
policymakers and government ofcials, the tape recorder turned
into a tool of intimidation, recalls Amnesty Internationalresearcher Brittis Edman.
particular the police and the courts. As forced evictionsincrease, public space for discussing them is shrinking.
Rights Razed noted that around 150,000 Cambodianswere at risk of eviction. This conservative estimate hassince been widely quoted in the international media. Forthe most part, however, the individual experiences ofthose affected go unreported.
This book is about the people behind those numbers.Losing Ground: Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodiashows how people living in poverty are routinely excluded
4 Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
The LakeForeword by Amnesty International
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Losing GroundLosing Ground
from decisions affecting them. So-called developmentoften happens to their detriment and at their expense,rather than in consultation with them.
From Battambang to Sihanoukville, from Koh Kongto Kratie, thousands of families have lost or are at riskof losing their homes and livelihoods. Hundreds livehuddled under plastic tarpaulins; disease and illness in
evicted communities is rampant. Others live in fear of thecourts, local officials, and police.
In the following pages, a number of people give voice
to their own, personal experiences. In a demonstrationof courage and determination, they insisted upon usingtheir real names, knowing they may face retribution fordoing so. They also show how budding grassroots activism
by ordinary Cambodians rice farmers, street vendors,teachers and taxi drivers brings people and communitiestogether to call for respect of their human rights.
Losing Ground: Forced Evictions and Intimidation in
Cambodia gives an indication of what is lost when a home isdestroyed or livelihood disrupted: not just the buildings,
but everything a home can be security, family, health,work and community.
The cases demonstrate that disregard for the affectedcommunities too often leads to making a bad situationworse, leaving the poor and marginalized with less thanthey had and with little recourse to justice.
Amnesty International is calling for an end to forcedevictions and is asking others to join our call. We arealso calling on the Royal Government of Cambodia tointroduce a moratorium on mass evictions until the legalframework and policies to protect the population against
forced evictions are in place.We request that the Cambodian government ensure
the safety of housing rights defenders including thecourageous people who have comeforward with their experiences in this
book so they are able to act freely,without intimidation, harassment orviolence in the peaceful exercise oftheir right to freedom of opinion, belief,expression and association.
Brittis EdmanSoutheast Asia Researcher,Amnesty International
There is an urgent need for officials topublicly condemn attacks against housing rights
defenders, and make sure there will be no
further arrests of individuals for engaging in the
peaceful exercise of their right to freedom of
opinion, belief, expression and association.
5Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
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Losing Ground
6 Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Homes are sinking into Boeng Kak Lake as it is being lled with sand to prepare for one Cambodias most controversial development projects.
The Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee
The immense strides Cambodia has made in manysectors over the past 30 years is sometimes overlooked by the media, donor and diplomatic communities. AsCambodian human rights organizations, we are wellaware of the deep complexity and historical roots of theproblems our nation still faces.
We know that genuine solutions are simple to plan,but difficult to accomplish on the ground. As an NGOcoalition we can offer to be a bridge to support genuineand productive dialogue between communities and
policy-makers.The following pages present a painful look into the lives
of people affected by forced evictions and intimidation,mainly the rural poor. The human rights abuses describedrange from loss of livelihood and health problems toviolence and imprisonment.
Still, this book is not intended to attack our governmentor detract from our accomplishments as a nation. It is acollection of voices from people rarely heard and as suchwe see it as a step towards more inclusive and equitabledevelopment.
These voices belong to Cambodians who have been orare facing eviction. Most have insisted that their names andphotographs be used, believing that openness will bring
justice and appropriate solutions. Such trust is inspiring.We believe it is the springboard for the next stage ofCambodias recovery from decades of civil strife, much ofwhich was prolonged or exacerbated by foreign powers.
Cambodias Constitution enshrines the right tofreedom of expression, a right that Cambodians need to
be able to exercise freely, without fear of reprisals. Fear, ahurdle to genuine development, is receding. Freedom ofexpression and citizen participation make it more possiblethat constructive partnership can be developed betweencitizens and their government.
We recognise the achievements of the government andbelieve mutually respectful dialogue will ensure that we,as a nation, continue to move forward.
After listening carefully to those affected by the lossof land and livelihoods, we are making four requests toaddress their plight: 1) all those who (in the followingpages) demonstrate their trust in justice should
be assured that they are safe to do so; 2) our LandLaw should be enforced more rigorously; 3) courts,authorities and the military should serve to protectthe people and be held accountable for failures to doso; and 4) Cambodian citizens should be encouragedto participate more fully in the development of ourcountry and their enhanced participation should
enhance the benefits they receive.Peoples participation is, we believe, necessary for the
next stage of re-building Cambodia.We believe our government, like Cambodian citizens,
is searching for ways to reach the next stage and that thestarting point is finding shared ground through mutuallyrespectful dialogue.
Sharing Ground?
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Residents of Ovor Preng community, Chrouy Sna village pray and set court documents are to demonstrate their frustration with their 12-year legal battle to retain
land they began clearing, demining and farming in 1990-1992. Residents say harassment by provincial police has increased since they walked to Phnom Penh in
2008 to seek help from Prime Minister Hun Sen.
The Long March
Losing Ground
7Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Battambang
The Case: Chrouy Sna village, Bavel district
Land dispute between 38 families and three well-connected businessmenbased in the provincial capital.
12-year court battle with one businessman who claims to own 125 hectaresof the farmers land.
Five-year dispute at Cadastral Commission with with two other businessmen,who claim 70 hectares
Residents have been jailed, apparent assassination attempt of communityleader on April 16, 2009. (Assailant shot the wrong person.)
Residents joined farmers from nearby villages to walk to Phnom Penh in2008 to seek assistance from Prime Minister Hun Sen. Several were assaultedand told to go home.
Commune and district officials support village residents and have affirmed
that the residents have been farming the land since 1990-1992, but lawyersfrom Legal Aid of Cambodia allege that both the provincial court andCadastral Commission are biased against them.
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We didnt have enough money to get the bus to Phnom
Penh. We had to walk. It was our last hope. We had to see
Hun Sen or we would lose our land, explains Mrs. Chim
Sarom, 45.
She, along with her husband and their four boys, aged
11 to 17, were among more than 200 members of farming
families from four villages in Battambang who walked more
than 300 kilometers along Highway 5 to Phnom Penh in
May 2008 to ask Prime Minister Hun Sen to solve their
land disputes before it was time to harvest the rice they had
sown. Many were in debt to money lenders for the purchase
of their seeds, Mrs. Sarom said. Every day we walked. The
closer we got, the more hope we felt, she said.
Another villager told his nine children they were going
to Phnom Penh to visit the Royal Palace. By the time they
reached the entrance to Hun Sens estate he felt 100 percent
sure the prime minister would help them, he said.
The march gained national attention. One participant
said it was encouraging to listen to the hourly updates on
Radio Free Asia and Voice of America. Contrary to claims
that the farmers had been incited to march by a provincialrepresentative of a Cambodian Human Rights Group, Mrs.
Sarom described the decision as a community idea agreed
upon during telephone conversations three or four days
before the walk began. Farmers from her village had met the
others during a provincial forum and kept in contact via cell
phone. We talked about going to court again, but we had
done that so many times and it hadnt worked. We agreed it
was hopeless, she said.
They gathered at a temple on Highway 5 east of the
provincial capital on May 24 and started walking at about
9am that day. I thought the government might try to stop us
because there were so many of us. I was surprised so many
people showed up from the other villages, Mrs. Sarom said.
Almost all the 141 residents in her village either walked or
were carried by their parents. We had no one to leave the
children with, she said.We didnt know how long it would take, so we ran out of
Left: Residents of Chrouy Sna village gather
in a show of unity two weeks after an apparent
assassination attempt, on April 16, 2009, of a
community leader.
Right: Residents say they will walk to Phnom
Penh again to try to save the land they have beenfarming since 1990.
Losing Ground
Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Maybe We Will Walk Again
The children were crying all the time. They
were hungry and thirsty. Sometimes we could
carry them, other times they had to walk.
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food and water, Mr. Choeun said. The children were crying
all the time. They were hungry and thirsty. Sometimes we
could carry them, other times they had to walk, Mrs. Sarom
said. Along the way, strangers would come to us and give usfood and water, she added.
Each day they started at 7am and stopped at 6pm at a pagoda,
after asking district police for permission. Police - often as
many as 12 officers - were sent to watch them.
Attempts to stop them began after they entered Pursat
province: when their march had become national news. Two
policemen told them to turn around and go home. We said
no and kept walking, Mrs. Sarom said.
Next, the deputy governor of Battambang arrived and told
them that if they returned he would solve the problem.
We spoke for about 15 minutes. He said he had never
heard about our problem", Mrs. Sarom said. "We didnt
believe him. We reminded him that we had protested in front
of the provincial court. Why didnt you help us then? weasked. He did not answer this question, so we kept walking.
At a pagoda near the border between Pursat and Kampong
Chhnang provinces, a Ministry of Interior official arrived to
meet them, accompanied by reporters and cameramen from
state-affiliated television stations. He invited five leaders,including Mrs. Sarom, to return to Battambang to find a
solution. We took the bus back to Battambang and talked
with the officials. We were assisted by two lawyers from
Legal Aid Cambodia (LAC), one from the province and one
from Phnom Penh. [The ministry official] told us to make
a new complaint to the court, but we had already done
that many times. After 15 minutes we called the group and
told them to keep walking. Then, we got a bus and rejoined
them, she said.
They arrived on June 2 in Phnom Penh and gathered at an
NGOs headquarters to seek assistance in delivering theirletter to Prime Minister Hun Sen. Some of us had worn
out our sandals. Our feet were blistered and bleeding; even
the ends of our trousers were torn and ragged, Mr. Mony
recalled.
They arrived at the entrance to the road leading to the
prime minister's estate at about 7pm. There were more
than 200 of us. There were about 30 police officers. We
delivered our complaint then slept on the other side of the
road, Mrs. Sarom said.
The next morning they were surrounded by members
of the Prime Ministers bodyguard unit. They were very
aggressive", one of the villagers said. One of them hit six
people on the head. They also tried to grab one boy and take
him away, but women rushed in and pulled him back. The
people that were hit on their heads were two women, one
over 40 and the other over 30, and four men, one in his early
20s and the others in their 30s.
After the police attacked the villagers, they were told to go
home. "We were given a letter from the government saying
an official would visit us at our village in June", Mrs. Sarom
said. "They also gave us $100 for bus fare. We crowded onto
one bus. We sat in our seats and in the aisle. Most of us were
silent all the way back. We didnt talk about the walk.
We didnt know if Hun Sen ever received our letter, so
we mailed it to his office. No government official ever came
to our village. If we have to, maybe we will walk again.
Losing Ground
9Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Some of us had worn out our sandals. Our
feet were blistered and bleeding; even the ends
of our trousers were torn and ragged
We didnt know if Hun Sen ever received our
letter, so we mailed it to his office.
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Losing Ground
They never found the bullet, but a finger-wide grooveremains in the wooden stilt less than six inches from wherethe head of Soeng Mony, the man believed to have been itsintended target, had been lying when the shot was fired
just minutes after midnight on Khmer New Year, April2009. The man it passed through before it grazed the stilt,his brother-in-law Bun Samphous,30, remained in the emergencyward of the provincial hospital foralmost two weeks.
Mr. Samphous said he thought he
had stepped on a booby trap whenthe bullet struck him because thepain came from the ground up.He had left his hut to find out whythe dogs were barking at about 10minutes after midnight on April16, but was shining his flashlight inthe wrong direction towards thenarrow dirt road that runs throughOvor Preng when he was shotfrom behind by an assailant armedwith an AK47.
The casing from the bullet wasfound on the ground about eightmeters from the hut where Mr.Mony and his brother-in-law had
been sleeping. Mr. Mony wokewith a jolt when he heard what hethought was an explosion, he said.He found his brother-in-law lyingon the ground screaming. I was too alarmed for my brotherto think the shooter might still be around. I never thought ofthat. All I thought was We have to get him to a hospital, hesaid. Four residents carried Mr. Samphous two-and-a-halfkilometers to a house where there was a motorized cart theycould use to transport him to the district health center about16 kilometers away. There, his wounds were cleaned and
bandaged and he was transferred to the provincial hospital.It was about 4am when he arrived at the emergency ward.
Timing
The shooting was the first (excluding warning shots) in a12-year conflict over the high-yield farmland in a remotecorner of Bavel district that gained national attention in
2008 when the residents of the village walked over 300kilometers to Phnom Penh to seek direct intervention from
Prime Minister Hun Sen. Their eight-day walk followed a 10-year battle at the provincial court that lawyers representingthem say typifies what happens when poor farmers clashwith wealthy, well-connected individuals over land.
Authorities allow the rich and powerful to bend the ruleswhile ordinary Cambodians suffer, a report by Legal Aid of
Cambodia (LAC) reads.The shooting occurred seven
days after residents of the villagereceived their latest notice fromthe provincial court ordering them
not to sow rice on about 70 of 161hectares of disputed land. In 2005,the 70 hectares were claimed byMon Mika, whose brothers includethe provinces chief of traffic policeand a one-star general in charge ofthe anti-drug trafficking division atthe Ministry of Interior. The courtorder also gave Mr Mika the rightto use the land while the case overwho owns it winds its way throughthe Cadastral Commission. Just days
after issuance of the court order,however, the farmers challenged itwith the assistance of six lawyersfrom LAC, and began sowing riceon the land they have farmed since,in some cases, 1990.
The 38 families who comprise thevillage cleared and demined the land
themselves. They succeeded in fending off one former policeofficer who tried to seize it in 1997. They have also managedto prevent Ieng Oeun, a well-connected businessman basedin Battambang city, from taking 125 hectares of the land, for10 years.
Residents say they feel more threatened by Mr. Mika. Hearrived in April 2005 with 20 to 30 armed men, a bulldozerand a letter from the commune chief saying he owned 50hectares of the land, according to LAC. Mr. Mika took the70 hectares from 23 families and used armed guards toprevent them from farming it, the NGO said.
Early this year a camp was established next to thevillage, where armed men keep an eye on the residentsand intimidate them by firing shots into the air at night,residents say. Police have also started blocking the farmers
from praying at pagodas and shrines in Battambang city thisyear, they say.
New Year Bullet
10 Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Mr. Soeng Mony shows where the shooter was
standing, about eight meters from his hut in Ovor
Preng.
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Losing Ground
11Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
An investigator with ADHOC in Battambang sums up thefarmers situation as an impossible choice: If they want theviolence to end they have to stop farming, but if they stop
farming they cannot survive.
Who owns the land?
We began clearing the land when it was still under controlof the Khmer Rouge in 1990, Mr. Mony said. We deminedit ourselves.
His neighbor Mrs. Chim Sarom, 45, explained: My familymembers are former soldiers so we know how to removelandmines. She counts how many she and her husbandremoved in terms of the three trucks needed to haul themaway. Mr. Mony said it took 13 years to clear his land of
mines.In 1994 and 1995 the area was a battlefield between the
remnants of the Khmer Rouge and government forces.Once the fighting stopped, the 38 families moved next totheir farmland and established their village. Although it stilllacks wells, a school or clinic, it is developing: the farmerssay their yields are increasing following the introductionof rice intensification techniques and they are investing infarming equipment. They are quite proud to point out thatone young man from their village is attending university inPhnom Penh. He is studying law.
The farmers have what are often called land receipts from
commune and district officials. These receipts acknowledgethat the officials have received letters from the residentsinforming them of the date the residents began cultivatingand/or living on the land and how much land they possess.The receipts can be used at the Cadastral Commission toobtain land titles, but are not official titles, according to LAC.The residents also have confirmation letters from communeand district officials verifying that they have farmed the landsince 1990-92.
Mr. Oeun holds an array of land titles, 22 in total, thathe argues give him ownership of 110 of the 164 hectares.These titles, however, are contentious, according to LAClawyers who point out that most are dated from 1994 whenthe land was a battlefield. This suggests that the titles weregranted before the land was formally demarcated, whichwould make them invalid, the lawyers say. Moreover, theyhave argued in court that some of Mr. Oeuns titles appearto have been tampered with and altered; that he has multipletitles for single plots; and, none of them match the map. TheBattambang court also ruled in 1999 that Mr. Oeuns landtitles did not cover the land used by the farmers of OvorPreng.
According to LAC, Mr. Mikas claim of ownership is based
on a letter from a commune official saying he owns 70hectares of land adjacent to Mr. Oeuns land. His dispute with
the residents is before the Cadastral Commission, thoughhe has used the courts to file criminal trespassing chargesagainst the farmers (they were dropped when challenged)
and, according to residents, has hired armed guards to keepthem off the land.
Night patrols
Since the 2008 Khmer New Year shooting, the residentsare taking precautions. Everyone is afraid of getting shot,said Mr. Pon Ranya, one of five men in the village residentsidentify as likely targets of assassination. Besides him and Mr.Mony, the others are: Thann Thang, Nee So Khoum and TithBun Choeun. Those are the five in most danger, agreedADHOC's investigator.
Residents now patrol their village till dawn in groups offour or five. The patrols include women and men and theirmembers alternate nightly.
Residents say they are aware that the assailant knows theirhabits quite well. He knows who sleeps where and when.The five men they believe are targets of assassination arewatched and sometimes followed by the armed men livingat the edge of their village, they say.
Still, they refuse to budge. Mr. Mony has grown a beard sothat he will be clearly recognizable to anyone who wants tokill him. He says he feels responsible that his brother-in-lawwas shot. If they want to kill me I dont want them to shoot
the wrong person again, he said.
Mrs. Chen Sara, 45, was among the original residents of the villagewho demined their farm land.
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Losing Ground
12 Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Rule of law?
1990-92: Families from four villages in Bavel district clearand begin demining Khmer Rouge controlled land.
1994-95: The area becomes a frontline battlefield between the Khmer Rouge and government forces.
Residents say 41 members of farming families are taken
by the Khmer Rouge and never seen again.
1996: Government forces take control of the area and thefarmers establish Ovor Preng village near their fields.
1997: A former police officer bulldozes land cultivated by residents (as well as land from other villages), but
desists after intervention from local authorities.
1999: Ieng Oeun bulldozes land and files complaintsat the Battambang provincial court claiming possession
of 15 hectares belonging to two parties in Ovor Preng
village. On October 19 Judge Pech Chhoeut hears both
cases and rules (judgments 235 and 236) that although
Mr. Oeun is the rightful owner of 110 hectares, his land
is not located on fields used by people of Ovor Preng.
2000-2004: Residents continue to farm the land,but during the harvest of 2004, armed men detain 14
farmers on behalf of Ieng Oeun. Battambang police
release six but charge eight others with theft of rice. The
six people were illegally detained without a hearing for
seven months and 10 days until a lawyer from Legal Aid
of Cambodia (LAC) secured their release.
Jan 4, 2005: Village representative Chem Keo files acomplaint at the Battambang court accusing Mr. Oeun
of hiring workers to harvest village residents rice. The
court charges Mr. Oeun with robbery, but does not
arrest him because he is ill.
Jan 12, 2005: Mr. Keo files a complaint with theBattambang court to reinstate its October 19, 1999
decision, arguing that the court had misused this judgment
to allow Mr. Oeun to claim farmland belonging to village
residents. The complaint also notes that the land had been re-mapped without informing the residents, and
legal procedures violated.
April 2005: Along with 20-30 armed men, Mon Mika seizes70 hectares from 23 families. They file a complaint with
the Cadastral Commission. On March 3, the Battambang
court prosecutor accuses residents of trespassing. LAC
challenges the criminal charges and they are dismissed.
Armed guards prevent farmers from accessing the land.
July 29, 2005: Mr. Keo files a complaint over Mr. Mikasland seizure. The court fails to respond.
April 24, 2006: Residents file a complaint to the National
Land Resolution Authority. On August 15 it sends a letterto the Ministry of Justice calling on it to settle the dispute.
The ministry fails to respond.
May 8, 2006: Residents appeal to the Supreme court tochallenge a 2005 decision by the Appeal Court in favor of
Mr. Oeun. The court decides in the residents' favor.
May 31, 2006: Mr. Keo is arrested and detained for 10months after being accused of trespassing. On May 22,
2007 he is sentenced but on June 5, 2007 LAC lawyers
successfully argue that the criminal charges be suspended
because legal ownership of the land has yet to be
determined. The prosecutor appeals and Mr. Keo remainsin detention. Village residents travel to Phnom Penh to
complain to the Ministry of Justice, which subsequently
orders Mr. Keos release.
March 14, 2007: Residents send a complaint to theMinistry of Interior about Mr. Mikas seizure of land, but
receive no reply.
June 19, 2007: Residents submit a second letter to theMinistry of Justice, but receive no reply.
Feb 12, 2008: Residents submit a letter to the Ministerof Justice asking that the judgments of the Battambang
court (235 and 236) on October 19, 1999 be enforced.The minister sends a letter to the Battambang prosecutor
asking for an explanation of why they were not. He does
not receive a reply to his letter.
May 24, 2008: Residents begin their walk to Phnom Penhto seek assistance from Prime Minister Hun Sen.
(Source: Legal Aid of Cambodia)
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Sugar Cane Concession
The Case: Sre Ambel
The concession: Economic Land Concession (ELC) foragro-industry.*
Date, size: Two concessions for 9,700 and 9,400 hectaresgranted in 2006 by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestryand Fisheries
Company: Koh Kong Sugar Industry Co. and Koh KongPlantation Co. run by a Cambodian senator and foreignpartners from Thailand and Taiwan
Development plan: Sugar cane plantation and sugarprocessing factory
Area: Koh Kong Province, Sre Ambel district, on land northof Road 48 from Sre Ambel to the Andoung ferry crossing.
Communities affected: About 400 families in villages of SreAmbel district who lost about 2,000 hectares of farmlandto the ELC.
* See Economic Land Concessions in Cambodia: A human rights perspective. June 2007.UN Cambodia Ofce of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
Losing Ground
Police and a commune chief (left) attend a March 2009 meeting between Sre Ambel district residents and their NGO lawyer to review their cases
involving the seizure of their forest lands for a sugar cane plantation in Koh Kong province. The commune chief brought two police ofcers and a
clerk with him, telling the lawyer he could not meet with village residents without written permission.
13Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Koh Kong
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From his wooden stilt house along newly built Road 48, Mr.
Kong Song can gaze across the lush green valley and see the
plume of gray smoke rising from the new sugar cane factory
built by his provinces biggest politician and businessman.
All around the factory lies the nearly 2,000 hectares of
farmland and orchard that used to belong to him and his
neighbors and is now being cultivated for sugar cane.
We are afraid they might grab more land, said Mr. Song,
a soft spoken man who has lived along the road since 1979.
We need someone to help us very soon.
Although no one had official titles to the land, underCambodias Land Law, Kong Song and his neighbors have
legal possession rights. (See appendix on the land law.)
Despite this, about 400 families who moved there in the
years after the Khmer Rouge era ended 30 years ago lost
their land in March 2006 when it was quietly transferred as
two national Economic Land Concessions to as senator and
tycoon. The residents claim they knew nothing about it until
bulldozers began clearing their land.
The first agro-industrial effort in this undeveloped area of
southwest Cambodia has been accompanied by illegal land
grabbing, livestock kidnapping, an apparent ax murder, and
three years of harassment that turned a decade of hard won
peace in the villages to uncertainty and fear. It has pushed
once thriving village families to the edge of poverty.
Value of the land
With the construction of bridges to the province over the
last few years, the ferries that hampered development have
been grounded and forest and pasture once worth very little
has risen in value. Although many of the families whoseland was taken settled with the company for a few hundred
dollars, others said the land is worth 10 times that. The 248
families remaining want fair compensation so they can buy
other land to replant and graze their livestock.
Cambodian and international rights groups have
condemned the evictions.* They said the company only
offered US$50 per hectare when the fair market value was
$500 to $1,000 per hectare. Most families had three to seven
hectares taken from them.
The 247 families have taken their protest up the government
Losing Ground
Fighting Back with Hand-painted Signs
* Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Global Witness, FORUM-ASIA, the Asian Human Rights Commission and the International Federation for Human Rights.
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hierarchy from village chief to commune chief to the district
governor to provincial governor and finally to the National
Assembly, with little result. In March 2007 about 150 men,
women and children began walking to Phnom Penh. NGOshelped arrange transportation after one day, and the villagers
subsequently delivered a complaint at the entrance to Prime
Minister Hun Sen's estate asking for his assistance.
Since then more and more farmers have sold their livestock
to buy food. They lost grazing land, rice paddy and fruit
groves a combination that provided food and a living.
Kidnapping cows and buffalos
My mother and father were born here. This is my home,
said Mrs. Cheav Ean, 63, an outspoken woman who sitscomfortably on the ground and is eager to tell her story.
They took my 11 hectares. Before they cleared my land
I grew watermelon. It takes 75 days to grow and I could
earn $1,000. It was enough. I had food, money, happiness
and freedom. I had more than 30 cows and buffalos. I sold
almost all. I have two cows left. Two cows were shot by the
company in 2007.
Harassment worsened in early 2009. In March the
commune chief tacked a notice on the wall of the local
gathering spot that said people whose cows or buffalos stray
onto company land must pay 50,000 riel ($12.50) for the
first offense, 100,000 riel for the second, and 150,000 riel for
the third. The rules made official a practice already underway
since the early days of the land concession: company guardshad been seizing livestock and holding them until the owner
could buy them back. When my buffalo roamed over there
I had to pay 70,000 riel ($17.50) the first time to get it back
and the second time I had to pay 80,000. I had to borrow
from friends, but I dont know what I can do. I may have to
sell my buffalo, said Mrs. Yeang Khar, 39. Her children now
tend the buffalo daily.
The cost of economic development
The commune chief, whose office posted the buffalowarning, defended the notices. He said he is stuck right in
the middle of the conflict. I dont know what to do. The
government gave the land to the private company. When
he tells his superiors at the district level about the villages
problems, They say wait, just wait. he explained.
A Koh Kong Deputy Governor is proud of the sugar cane
factory and plantation and regards it as a key economic
development project along with the casino and a planned
hydroelectric dam. The deputy governor doesnt believe
all the village residents have legitimate claims to the land.
Losing Ground
Left: All along Highway 48
in Sre Ambel district rice sacks
hang from roadside fences as
village residents attempt to
publicize their evictions from
their land.
Right: The rst sugar
plantation in Koh Kong province is opening the
dry season of 2009 in Sre
Ambel District. Hundreds of
families lost their farmland
to make way for the factory
and plantation.
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Losing Ground
16 Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Moreover, the provincial government gives priority to
economic development: The choice is between 100 village
people who lose their land or 1,000 people who get jobs.
The province is looking into the cases but the governmentneeds the development here. The people cannot ask for too
much. They have to compromise. Their rights are limited,
the deputy governor said. It should be 20, not 100 families.
Im sure there can be a compromise for the ones with the
true story, the deputy governor said, adding, and for those
who vote for the right political party. The official explained
that the involvement of the senator and his companies has put
the conflict beyond the capacity of the province to decide
and suggested that, the prime minister has to decide.
The senator has in the past apologized for company guards
shooting the peoples livestock and has said that although hecannot return the land, he has set up a committee to deal
with the problems.
Koh Kongs chief judge said land cases are the courts
biggest problem. But after leafing through his case notebook
for several minutes, he told an interviewer that he had no
record of cases for Sre Ambel residents. Theres no file. The
problem has been solved, he said.
Asked whether the senator's company has the ability to
manipulate the court, he said, No thats impossible. He
said villagers always jump on any chance to complain when
their land is taken. You start out with five families living in a
place, and then there are suddenly 30 or 40 or 50 families.
The court cases
The Economic Land Concession is most likely illegal, should
be overturned and the village residents either given their
land back or compensated for it, according to lawyers for
the Community Legal Education Center (CLEC) in Phnom
Penh.
A CLEC attorney represents them on two complaints inprovincial court: one on behalf of villagers whose buffalo
were slain or kidnapped by company officials, and the other
to overturn the land concession.
The lawyer said the ELC violated Cambodian Land Law
provisions limiting economic land concessions to 10,000
hectares. The senator got around that by setting up two
companies, which each received a concession. The shares in
the concessions have since changed but are in the names of
two companies. One is 49 percent owned by the senator
and 51 percent owned by a Thai businessman. The other
is owned by the senator, Khon Kaen Sugar Industry Plc ofThailand and Ve Wong Corp. of Taiwan.
According to CLEC the land concession violated villagers
land rights. During the Khmer Rouge era all land titles were
destroyed and the village residents have not been issued legal
titles since then. However, they have lived on their land for
more than five years before 2001, giving them a right to
possess the land under Cambodian law. Possession rights area strong legal right, which can be bought, sold and used as
collateral for bank loans. The residents have family records
showing they have occupied the property for years, in some
cases since 1979. Some of the residents said they were born
on the land and so were their parents or grandparents.
Apparent homicide
There have been other problems. In 2006 the farmers
spotted bulldozers clearing their land. They protested and
one farm wife, 38-year-old Mrs. Baet Nim, was shot in thefoot. In December that year, farmer An In, an outspoken
The people cannot ask for too much. Theyhave to compromise. Their rights are limited ...
Im sure there can be a compromise for the oneswith the true story, and for those who vote for
the right political party.
A Koh Kong deputy governor
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Losing Ground
17Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
resident who had taken photos of the land clearing activities,
was murdered by three chops of an ax to the back of the
neck.
An In was an activist, explained his older brother AnLeoun. He took photos of the peoples land when the
bulldozers came.
Mr. Leoun said he submitted a complaint about the murder
to the court, but nothing came of it.
The commune chief, when asked about the murder,
mentioned a range of possible motives. He said it was
possible the farmer was killed by an enemy or that he could
have fallen victim to magic or sickness.
After three years, events are taking a toll on the families.
Our peoples lives are miserable now. We have very little
food from day to day. It is very hard for us to get vegetablesto eat. If I go to my land to find fruit I am not allowed in.
[Guards] tell me if I do it they will accuse me of trying to
burn their sugar cane, said one resident who lives on a dirt
road back from the highway in Chouk Village.
Rin Souphan, 41, who lives in Chikor Village, said he used
to earn $1,000 a year and could live off his land where he
grew cashew nuts and jackfruit. He could send his children
to school. The living was enough. Now every morning he
and his wife mix coconut, water and flour to make a tray of
small cakes they sell for a few hundred riel each, earning
$1.25 if people buy all of them.
It is difficult now and we are scared, he said.
Koh Kongs Tycoon
According to media reports the Cambodiansenators companies have the following holdings or
licenses in Koh Kong province:
Sand mining license to dredge sand, which is
exported to Singapore.
Casino hotel on the border of Koh Kong and
Thailand.
Koh Kong Special Economic Zone, which
is reportedly about to get its first factory, an
assembly plant for South Korean automobile maker
Hyundai.His foreign partners in the sugar cane factory
and plantation are Thai company Koh Kaen Sugar
Industry Public Co. Ltd, and Taiwanese partner Ve
Wong Corp.
He is well known in ruling party circles and is
a contributor to causes. For example, on March
16 when the head of the Cambodian Red Cross
made a red carpet visit to its Koh Kong office TV
reports showed the senator giving her a $30,000
donation.
Opposite page: A notice from
the commune council warning
farmers that livestock that stray on
to company land will be seized andnes will have to be paid to retrieve
them.
Left: Kong Song, a villagespokesman in Sre Ambel District,
says we need someone to help usvery soon.
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Like many Cambodians with aspirations of upward
mobility, Teng Kav once dreamed of buying a car for
his family. But that was before he began a slow descent
into poverty after losing his farmland to the new sugar
plantation.
I used to grow
watermelon, cashew nuts,
palm tree, mango, bamboo
and sweet tamarind on myland, said Mr. Kav, who
lives with his wife and
children in a wooden house
painted blue with a flower
box out front.
My whole family worked
on the land, my wife and six
children. I grew rice to eat
and my family could earn
a minimum of $1,000 ayear. We had a field for our
buffalo and cow to graze. I
had more than 20 buffalo
and cow. Now I have only
seven or eight left.
He explained that some
have been shot, and he had
to sell others to buy food,
and the prices the livestock
fetched were much lower
than they should have been.
He said his buffalo were so
thin he got only 500,000
riel ($125) for a buffalo that used to be worth 1.5
million riel ($375).The rest are dying of hunger and
will have to be sold, he said.
In 2006 they shot my first cow. By the time I found
it, it already smelled bad. They shot two cows and
burned my cottage on December 8, 2006. The shooting
worsened in January. When [company employees]
were clearing our land the cow and buffalo wanted to
go where they always ate and drank. When the guards
saw them they shot our cows.
Now if we go to collect bamboo they stop us and
ask for money from us. If they catch our oxcart they
demand 60,000 riel
($15). They dont allow
us to cut the thatch
for our roof. We needfirewood for cooking.
Normally, we go to
the forest, but now the
company catches us. We
need a lot of help. We
can tie the cow, but the
buffalo are strong, so
now my children have to
stay home from school
to look after them.Before the company
arrived I worked a lot
with my wife. We had
money to buy pens
and other things so the
children could go to
school. I thought in the
future my family could
buy a car and as I got
older my children could
harvest the fruit from
the orchard and sell it
in the market and make
a living. I had enough of everything: rice, land, buffalo
and cows. I could support my family without worry.
I lived here since I married my wife in 1982. I went
into the forest and cut the trees to build my house.
Now I have a feeling in my heart that my children
will not have proper accommodations for life. Other
people here have the same problem.
Killing Livestock & Livelihoods
Losing Ground
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Former residents of Burnt Bridge village have been living in a ditch behind a popular tourist beach in Preah Sihanouk province since being violently evicted
from their land more than two years ago. Health workers have documented a severe decline in the health of the former residents, especially children, of what had
been a self-sustaining village. They were promised new land before the national election in July 2008, but after the election the pledge was "forgotten," they say.
Coastal Eviction
The Case: Spean Ches village, Mittapheap district*
Violent eviction of more than 100 families on the morningof April 20, 2007 by a mixed group of about 150 soldiers,military police and municipal police.
Eviction notice signed by then governor without anappropriate court decision.
Homes demolished or torched, crops and fruit treesdestroyed, numerous residents, two police officers and onemilitary police officer injured.
Thirteen residents, including a 16-year-old boy, arrestedand sent to pre-trial detention that afternoon.
Two years later residents are still awaiting compensation ornew land.
Their health has severely declined. Many remain severelytraumatized, have no reliable source of income and are becoming increasingly desperate. They live in unhygienicconditions in makeshift shacks in a ditch near the land theybegan clearing in 1987.The land they were evicted from remains vacant.
* Village name translates as Burnt Bridge.
Losing Ground
19Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Preah Sihanouk
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The effects of a forced eviction may be incalculable, but
former resident of Burnt Bridge village, Mrs. Seoun Sarun
sums them up in three sentences: We are still in shock.We
still feel sickened. We cant sleep.
In the two years since their violent eviction, 107 families1
have been crammed into a row of makeshift shacks (some of
which are not even high enough to stand in) in a ditch along
a dirt road behind Otres beach. The once self-sustaining and
closely-knit village has become reliant on donations from aid
groups and missionaries, while the health of its residents has
severely deteriorated.There has been an increased incidence of infectious
disease, skin rashes, abscesses, diarrhea, respiratory illnesses,
intestinal worms as well as malnourished children, according
to health monitoring conducted by the Sihanoukville-based
NGO MLop Tapang. The children used to be healthy and
alert. Now, theyre listless and lethargic. When they get sick
it takes a long time to recover, Hannah McLean, a nurse
with the NGO, explained.
Her bond with the residents of the village was intense,
and she recalls being deeply shaken as other aid workers
in Sihanoukville were by the eviction. I didnt believe it.I had to see it for myself. I was devastated [when she arrived
at the scene], she recalled. What you have to understand
is that this used to be the happiest village to visit. We didnt
come across a lot of the social problems that are prevalent in
some other villages, like gambling, alcoholism and domestic
abuse. It was a very closely knit village. The children would
come running to us when [their mobile library] arrived.
We did not start a nutrition program until after the
eviction, because there was no need for one until that
time,she added.2 Our success [in assisting children at risk
of exploitation] is being undermined by the government,
another aid worker said.
Bible study
Since the eviction, which included the destruction of the
village primary school, the children have started attending
bible-study classes offered by a Korean missionary group.
Eleven of the older children have been relocated to a
Christian school in Phnom Penh, according to the group
run by Reverend Moses Han. The parents are reluctant to
criticize the missionaries efforts to convert them and their
children, saying that bible studies are not compulsory butencouraged. The missionary group calls their schools bible
1 The number of families had declined to 80 as of April 2009; 27 families are now living with relatives.2 MLop Tapangs Otres Nutrition Program began in September 2007 after the NGO observed that the health of young children from the evicted village was continuing to
deteriorate. It began providing nutritional supplements to al l children under fve years old.
Losing Ground
Burning Bridges in Preah Sihanouk
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study schools. The parents are also quick to point out that
the missionaries provide rice and noodles. Almost everyone
else has forgotten us, one resident said, adding: We need
education for our children; they help. Another noted thatthey had not received legal assistance in more than a year.
Some residents admit to being troubled that their children
may lose their Buddhist heritage. When pressed, Mrs. Sarun
replied forlornly: We have no choice. She, along with a
small group of residents, have made six attempts so far to
meet the provincial governor to request land to relocate
their village on, since his appointment following Cambodias
national election in July 2008.On each of their visits to City
Hall the residents have requested land on which they can
rebuild their village. They say they have gotten no further
than the administration department, and that they are beingignored.
No one [in the government] wants to talk about this
anymore, Mrs. Sarun said. They always say they are going
to have a meeting to discuss this, but they never give us a
date. Not a single official from the municipal government
has visited them, residents say. However, prior to the national
election in July 2008 they had been promised new land by an
official of the Cambodia Peoples Party, but after the partys
landslide victory this pledge was forgotten, residents say.
They say they plan to move back to the 16 hectare plot they
were evicted from if they dont get new land soon. Weve
told City Hall that if we dont get compensation [new land]
we will move back to our land, Mrs. Sarun said.
This has provoked a threat. A member of the Commune
Council warned us that if we try to do that the same thing
will happen to us again, she said. Now, were asking for justhalf of our land, she continued, adding that they would take
the section furthest back from the road because they believe
it is less valuable.
Tear gas and AK47s
At about 7am on April 20, 2007, more than 100 heavily
armed military, municipal and civil police blocked access to
the village and ordered the residents to leave immediately.
They refused. Over the next two hours the number of
armed police swelled to more than 300, residents say. Theywere armed with AK47s, truncheons, electric batons, tear
gas, and water cannons that they used to flush the residents
out of their homes.
Police began by firing warning shots into the ground and
air. Terrified children ran towards the beach, the parents say.
Some residents fought back with stones, sticks and knives,
but were swiftly subdued.
When a gun is pointed at your face it is hard to fight back,
said Mr. Sang Pean, 49, who said he had been shot above the
knees in both legs during a previous, failed attempt to evict
the residents on November 25, 2006. There were far fewer
armed officers that day and the residents fended them off.
Left: In April 2007,
residents are forced to lie
on the ground at gunpoint
as their homes are torched.
They were prevented from
moving personal belongings,
including mats and
blankets, from their homes.
Right: Some of the
residents were knocked
unconscious after being
struck with truncheons and
electr ic batons. Residents say
police continued to hit them
after they had been forced
to lie on the ground.
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We fought like animals, Mr. Pean said.
On April 20, 2007, two municipal police officers and one
military police officer were injured along with 18 residents
(13 men and five women), including a 77-year-old man whohad to be hospitalized after being struck on the forehead with
an electric baton, according to reports from human rights
groups. The village was quickly razed: homes were torched
and bulldozed, gardens destroyed and fruit trees uprooted.
Residents say most of their belongings were looted or
destroyed, including fishing nets, 16 motorcycles and two
generators. They retrieved the motorcycles but had to pay
$30 for each one, but the generators were not recovered,
they said.
Police arrested 13 males, including a 16-year-old boy. All
were imprisoned that afternoon. The men who had not beenarrested fled and went into hiding for fear of arrest.
The women were sobbing. Children were crying for their
fathers. They were in an intense state of shock, the nurse
recalled. But after a few hours the women started gathering
scraps of wood and plastic and assembling temporary
shelters. I was struck by their resilience. I dont know where
they found it.
A network of NGOs in the area provided tarpaulins and
household utensils as well as an emergency supply of food,
water, mats and blankets, and the women set up temporary
shelters along a shoulder-high wall about 200 meters from
their land. (They were subsequently told by the owner of the
property to move their shelters away from the wall, which
pushed them into the ditch.)Ten days after the eviction, a construction crew began
erecting a concrete wall around their land and spray painted
a for sale message along with a phone number on it.
The phone number has since been painted over. Residents
believe this was done to hide the identity of the seller,
following the controversy over their eviction, which drew
condemnation from national and international human rights
groups.
The cadastral office identified the wife of an advisor to a
deputy prime minister as the owner of the land.3
Lack of titles
The residents say they had no official land titles because they
could not afford the fees, but under Cambodias Land Law
the fact that they lived on the land uncontested for five years
prior to its enactment in 2001 means they have a strong case
for legal ownership. The village, named after a nearby bridge
that was accidently set afire when the area was controlled by
the Khmer Rouge, was established in the mid 1980s by 17
families, residents said.
Losing Ground
Left: Mrs. Seoun Sarun was among the original residents who
cleared the land in the mid 1980s. She has made six attempts to meet
the provinces governor since his appointment in September 2008
to seek compensation, but has not gotten past the administration
department.Below: The severely unhygienic conditions the families
are living in have caused a dramatic increase in illness.
3 Source: Licadho
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We were very poor. We moved here and cleared the land.
We had access to safe water and were close to the sea so
we could fish, Mrs. Sarun explained. The village had been
registered with the Commune Council (Commune 4 ofMittapheap district), but the number of residents, and the
year they moved to the village, is disputed. This dispute
arose after coastal land prices began soaring in 2005.
At this time, the islands off the coast were leased to foreign
and domestic companies to develop upscale resorts, while
beach front property was earmarked for five-star hotels.
One development plan for the municipality erased the
village from the map. It shows that the area along and behind
Otres beach has been set aside for upscale developments,
including hotels and rows of villas. According to this plan, the
town will expand eastward and a road will run behind Otresbeach connecting the town center to the airport (scheduled
to open later this year) and an adjacent duty free zone and a
Special Economic Zone. Real estate agents and residents say
the development plan was never widely circulated, except
among those who could afford to participate in the land
buying spree.
Allegations that many plots were purchased by buying
pre-dated land titles from corrupt officials are rife. Plots
were often quickly flipped as prices doubled and tripled,
realtors say. Suspicions over the authenticity of land titles
has become widespread; advertisements for sales of coastalproperty now often include the phrase includes strong
title. Moreover, many renters of beachside restaurants and
guesthouses along the resorts main beach, Ocheuteal, say
they are reluctant to sign long-term leases because they are
uncertain about their place in the resorts long-term future.
This uncertainty has also made them reluctant to speak on
the record: most of those interviewed said they like to keep
a low profile.
Eviction boom
During the resorts eviction boom (2005-2008), the Asian
Human Rights Commission made numerous urgent appeals
for an investigation into the then-governor's role in forced
evictions and allegations that he was profiting from them.
In an interview, the former governor brushed aside these
allegations, saying every time an NGO writes a report it
makes money.4 He expressed no sympathy for those who
had been evicted, describing them as servants trying to claim
ownership of the homes they had worked in: Its like having
a servant who stays at your house for five years and he says,Ive lived here for five years so now the house is mine.
During the same interview he also unveiled his plan for
the areas development, saying the resort would eclipse Bali
and Phuket within a decade.
The rise to the peak of the property bubble (2004-2008)coincided with increasingly violent forced evictions, as well
as tougher criminal charges against residents who resisted,
records from rights groups show. Moreover, the then
governor bypassed courts to order evictions, rights groups
say. The eviction of Burnt Bridge village was carried out
without an appropriate court order.
Since the bursting of the bubble in 2008, the resorts five-
star development plan appears to be on hold. Construction
has slowed or stopped at many sites as the number of foreign
tourists has declined. Although it is walled off in parcels, the
land behind Otres beach remains vacant except for grazingcattle. Molding concrete walls around the plots are spray
painted with For sale signs, some of which include the
words Urgent Sale.
At the resorts main beach, tourists and venue owners
are complaining about a rise in petty thefts. Gangs of young
children roam the beach stealing iPods, mobile phones
and wallets from tourists, they say. Bars are selling beer
at 25 cents a glass and cocktails by the bucket, while the
proliferation of hostess bars and karaoke joints continues
unabated and motorcycle taxi drivers pester male tourists
with offers of drugs and young prostitutes.Although the previous governor is no longer in office, his
five-star vision for the coastal resort appears to be in danger of
following the residents of Burnt Bridge village into the ditch.
4Battle Ground, South China Morning Post, Nov. 22, 2007
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Sixteen-year-old Bo Ravy was crawling to the road, he was aboutfive meters from it, when three military police began booting himin the ribs. He remembers being kicked at least once by each ofthem: the rest is a blur. This happened after he had been knockedto the ground outside his home where he had been struckrepeatedly on his head, left shoulder and back with truncheons while removing family belongings, he recalls.
The police remained silent while they tookturns kicking him. They didnt shout or speakor even make a sound, Ravy said. None ofhis ribs were broken, but he sustained severebruising and was in intense pain for more thana week. This made sleeping on the concretefloor of the prison cell he was locked intolater that day almost impossible. It was socrowded I had to sleep on my side, but it hurttoo much, and I couldnt find a comfortableposition [to sleep in], he explained.1
At the police station, shackles were addedto the handcuffs that had been placed aroundhis wrists at the eviction site (his handshad been cuffed behind his back). He wasslapped across the face and head repeatedlyby the officer who interrogated him. I cantremember how many times he hit me, but
when he started he would hit just once thenstop, then he started hitting me more oftenand harder, sometimes three or five times before he paused, Ravy recalled. After 30minutes, he was instructed to thumbprinta confession. (Ravy can neither read norwrite and says the confession was not readto him before he thumb-printed it.)
Almost two years after his assault andsubsequent imprisonment, he remainsconfused about the official charges that ledto his arrest, but is quick to explain what hebelieves the reason was: It was because I washelping my parents remove our belongingsfrom our home.
Ravy was the youngest of the 12 maleresidents arrested that day.He weighed lessthan 40kgs and was just 160cm in height. The12 were charged with assault and destructionof property.2 After being beaten while their homes were beingtorched, they were trucked to a police station at about 11am,then transferred to court by noon in one group. The judge madea swift decision. By 3pm they were all in prison.
Ravy was the youngest of the 35 prisoners in his cell. Thefirst thing I did was start looking for a way out. I knew it wasimpossible, but I couldnt stop my eyes from searching, he said.He checked the bars to see if any were loose and the window:
to see if there might be some place he could squeeze out. At the
same time, he said, he was frantically wondering whether anyoneoutside the prison was trying to get him released. I didnt evenknow if my parents knew where I was, he said. I couldntbreathe. I felt like I was going to die.
It was four days before a lawyer was allowed to visit him andthe 11 others imprisoned. The day before, his mother, Mrs.Chuen Sarat, began the first of her weekly visits to Chournot
Takwarn prison. She brought him food and wasallowed to visit him for 30 minutes each time.She said she was required to pay a 1,000 riel(25 cents) bribe to prison staff for each visit.
I could only afford to visit him once aweek, she explained. The round trip on amotorbike-taxi cost 10,000 riel ($2.50)and in the aftermath of the eviction theformer residents of the village were left withnothing (their belongings had been destroyedor stolen, they said) and the women werescrambling to set up temporary shelter in theditch along the east side of the a dirt road thatleads to Otres beach. (Most of the men whohad not been arrested had fled the area in fearthat they would be arrested.)
Mrs. Sarat recalls the 30 minute visitsas being compressed with extreme and
conflicting emotions. Of course, I wasrelieved to see him, but it was agonizing. Hewas in jail. He is my child. How do you thinkI felt? I could see he was terrified. I felt soashamed that I could not get him out. I wasashamed to look him in the eye. I wanted tocomfort him, but I didnt know if LICADHOcould get him released.
After one month he was freed. (The other12 men were imprisoned for as long as fourmonths, residents said.) Even during hisprocessing out of the prison he was intenselywary, suspecting that at any moment theguards might change their mind and returnhim to his cell, he said.
It was not until he passed through the finalgate that he began to believe that he was reallyfree. He recalled feeling a sudden burst ofrelief and elation.
This feeling of freedom, however, has not been permanent.Ravy is haunted by the experience and sometimes stands asthough he is still in shackles. When recalling his time in prisonand the events that preceded it his expression becomes tense, hiseyes dart around, and his posture tightens.
An unexpected or sudden sight of a police officer or soldiercan trigger panic. Its like seeing a ghost, he explains. Hisheart races, he loses his breath, his muscles clench, and he starts
trembling.
Beaten then Jailed
1 None of those imprisoned received medical assistance for two weeks, according to village residents and LICADHO, which provided legal assistance to the imprisoned evictees.2 The 12 were charged with wrongful damage to proper ty (Article 52, UNTAC Law) over allegations that they destroyed police equipment used during the eviction, as well as
battery with injury (Ar ticle 41 UNTAC Law). A 13th male resident, who had escaped the eviction site, was charged in absentia.
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The proliferation of smaller concessions around the massive Pheapimex land concession is sparking new disputes. La Peang village residents, like Mrs. Un Sophy,
are concerned about the possible loss of their land and livelihoods.
Vanishing Forest
The Case: Pheapimex
The concession: Land concession for agro-industry.Date and size: more than 300,000 hectares granted in two
70 year contracts in 2000.Company: Pheapimex Co. Ltd.Development plan: Plant fast growing acacia and eucalyptus
trees for pulp and build a modern paper mill.Area affected: The plantation concession in Kampong
Chhnang and Pursat includes all the available forest land inthe area and is bordered by the Aural Wildlife Sanctuary tothe east and by the Tonle Sap to the west. Both areas areprotected. It includes four districts in Kampong Chhnang(Saamaki Meanchey, Teuk Poh, Rolea Pha-ea and Boribo)and three in Pursat (Kravanh, Sampov Meas and Krakor).
Communities affected: Hundreds of villages in about 50
communes where families rely on the forest for gatheringnon-timber products and grazing cattle.
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25Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Pursat and Kampong Chhnang
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Oum Huot woke with a start from his side of the mosque
compound when he heard the burst of sound like a truck
tire blowing out. He was sleeping with about 800 other
residents from the Pursat-Kampong Chhnang border area
following a protest against Pheapimex.
The company had begun clearing land in the area to start
planting acacia trees, and the wiry Pursat farmer, 61 at the
time, had joined the others to protest. The group was allowed
to spend the night in the Kbal Damrey village mosque in
Ansa Chambak Commune in Pursat Province.
One of the district officials told us it was okay to stay
here. They said they would protect us, said Mr. Huot.
I was asleep. I didnt see anything, but I heard the
screaming. It sounded like a truck tire blowing out. I smelled
the explosive, and I knew it was a bomb.
The grenade attack in November 2004 sent almost 10
people to the hospital with injuries and marked a low point
in the nearly decade-long land dispute between thousands of
residents living in dispersed villages in Pursat and Kampong
Chhnang provinces and Pheapimex, the formidable logging
company. The grenade thrower has not been found.
Pheapimex holds the license to two land concessions
totaling more than 300,000 hectares of forest straddling the
border of the two provinces. The economic land concessions
are the biggest in Cambodia. They were granted to
Pheapimex to convert the forest to an acacia and eucalyptus
plantation and build a paper mill. The company received
the concessions from the Ministry of Agriculture Forestry
and Fisheries in 2000, before the enactment of the 2001
Cambodian Land Law. Combined they are 30 times larger
than the maximum allowed by the Land Law. Human rights
groups and village residents have asked that the concessions
be overturned.
So far the company has not agreed to re-negotiate and
reduce the size of its concession, in accordance with the sub-
decrees that followed the Land Law.*
Although, since the grenade attack, Pheapimex has not
done very much on the acacia plantation, since 2000 areas
of forest have been cleared bit by bit and residents of the
villages say many people are suffering from food shortages
because they can no longer gather sufficient fruits, nuts and
wildlife from the deforested area.
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Massive concession looms over two provinces`
26 Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Pheapimex Time Line
1997: Land concession first proposed. Pursat Province Department of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries describes the
majority of the concession area as damaged woodland.Jan 8 2000: Cambodian Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF) grants 70-year agricultural concession
contracts totaling more than 300,000 hectares of spare forest in Pursat and Kampong Chhnang to Pheapimex Fuchan
Cambodia Co., Ltd. The contracts allow for agro-industrial development.Dec 25, 2000: Public ceremony attended by Hun Sen to sign agreement between Pheapimex and the China Corp. of State
Farms Group calling for China Corp. to invest $70 million in an eucalyptus tree plantation on entire concession area. Theywill also build a paper factory using eucalyptus as raw materials.
March 2001: Village representatives in Ansa Chambak commune where the concession work is to start meet withprovincial officers from MAFF and the Ministry of Environment to object to Pheapimex clear-cutting the local forest.They propose a community run tree-planting effort. The village representatives say the opposition among the villages wasuniform.
Nov 2004: The company began clearing ground in Thlong Popok commune on the border of Veal Sbov village, TaingKrasaing commune, Toek Phos district, Kompong Chhnang province in a forest area claimed by the local people for acommunity forest. Local people prevent company attempts to expand operations into the neighboring Boribo district.
Nov 12, 2004: Farmers from both provinces protest company activities. In the early hours of 13 November, a grenade isthrown at village residents sleeping in the compound of the local mosque, injuring eight.
* NGO Forum on Cambodia. Briefing Document. November 2008
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representative named one company and in Pursat, a
resident of Kla Kropeu village, Anlong Thout commune,
Krakor district, named another concession holder (Ratana
Visal Company) that has fenced off large swaths of theforest land and put in a dam to divert the residents water
supply to irrigate its own land. Following pressure from the
community, the dam was removed.
The men said the company officials never speak to them,
unless they want to harass them, and then they send over
the police.
In some areas, these unidentified officials have spread the
word that if you dont sell your land, it will be taken anyway,
said Mr. Kim Seng, 50, of Andoung Roveang village, Agnagn
Roung commune in Boribo district, Kampong Chhnang
province. He said about 100 families have sold out because
of the threats.
Theyre cutting and clearing, he said. Theyve cut all the
big trees. We do not know exactly what company.
The land concession
The land was leased in two separate deals by the MAFF in
2000 to Pheapimex Fuchan Cambodia Co Ltd. Later that
year Pheapimex formed a joint venture with China Corp.
of State Farms Group to plant the fast growing acacia and
All the people here are rice farmers but they also depend
on the forest to get fruit, potatoes, mushrooms, traditional
medicines, explained Kuch Veng, a 45-year-old farmer from
Kralagn village, Kbal Trach commune in Krakor district ofPursat province.
Mr. Veng was in the compound when the grenade went
off. He said 10 minutes before the explosion he saw a black
car drive past the mosque and two men get out. After the
explosion, he saw one man run towards the police offices
near the mosque. After that I slept in the forest for a week,
he said.
Mr. Veng said the forest in his district has always been
abundant with fruits, large trees, and wildlife and tubers,
but for the last three years woodcutters have been cutting
the trees, leaving nothing but scrubland. As a result, wildlife
is disappearing.
Mr. Veng said families used to be able to earn at least
10,000 riel per day (about $2.50) but now we cannot even
earn 2,000.
There were many kinds of fruit. There were big trees and
lots of animals. Now weve lost 80 percent of our forest.
Mr. Veng and other residents of two provinces said although
they know their forest is disappearing, they dont know for
sure who is responsible.
In Boribo district of Kampong Chhnang a village
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27Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Pheapimex Time LineNov 13, 2004: The chief of Krakor district and a representative of the provincial Governor of Pursat arrived with a letter
from the Governor asking farmers to go home to tend the rice fields.Nov 2004: Protest grows to 1,000 farmers as protesters arrive from Battambang and Banteay Meanchey. Armed police
block the roads to prevent more from coming. Demonstrations continue for a few more weeks, but end with harassment
from police.Jan 18, 2005: 300 residents of villages in Kampong Chhnang province gathered at Kraing Skea to protest after the company
brought in 300 workers to build a second camp. The company withdrew the workers. A few days later, 30 villagers traveledto Toek Phos district office to meet with the district authorities to demand the company withdraw.
Jan 31, 2005: About 50 villagers from Ansar Chambok attempted to stop the activities of the company but were dispersedwhile en route to the site by police.
March 11-15, 2005: Confrontations between local people in Kraing Skea commune and company and forestryadministration officials took place when the officials went to demarcate the boundaries of the concession. Local people askfor set up of a forestry community.
Mar 23, 2005: Company stopped activities in Toeuk Phos district. The Chinese technicians dismantled their settlement.Aug 2008: Local residents submitted complaint to MAFF, Council Minister requesting the Pheapimex concession be
cancelled and to establish the forestry community.
Sources: UNHCHRC and University of Pennsylvania Law Journal
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eucalyptus trees and build a huge, modern paper mill. By
2007 Pheapimex had a new partner, Booyong Co. Ltd. of
Korea. That cooperation lasted less than a year.
An August 22, 2008 letter signed by a Council of Ministersofficial Prak Sokhon confirmed the Booyong partnership was
finished and said Pheapimex will cooperate with a new partner
in order to processing the investment on concession area.
So far none of Pheapimexs official plans announced when
the concession was granted have materialized.
For three years after signing the concession, Pheapimex
did little until November 2004 when it began clearing
ground for nurseries in Kampong Chhnang province (in
Krasaing commune, Toek Phos district, and Onsar Chombok
commune, Krakor district).
Then came the grenade attack in Pursat.
Inflamed by the attack, the demonstrations and negotiations
with police and provincial authorities continued without a
resolution until January 18, when Pheapimex tried to start
a third work camp, this time in Kraing Skea in Kampong
Chhnang. Farmers protested again and the company
withdrew the workers, pulling out of both provinces.
Community Forests
Some residents believe that a partial solution to the land
dispute could be reached by working with the ForestAdministration to set aside as many Community Forests as
possible within the concession.
The Forestry Administration has been holding talks with
some village leaders to push this agenda.
Others strongly disagree. They say that the Forestry
Administration only wants to grant relatively small
Community Forests of about five hectares per family and
that because the land concession is probably illegal, it should
be overturned.
They also say that if they accept Community Forests,
officials will say they have no right to object to land clearing
in other areas.
In August 2008, some of the villages and communes in the
area thumb-printed a letter to the Ministry of Agriculture,
Forestry and Fisheries to cancel the land concession and
designate parts of it as Community Forest.
There has been no action on the petition.
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Far Left: Oum Huot was in the mosque
during the 2004 grenade attack. He
hopes to get a community forest for his
village.
Left: Kim Seng in Boribo district of
Kampong Chhnang: Theyve cut all the
big trees.
Right: Kuch Veng: All the people are
rice farmers but they also depend on the
forest.
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29Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
Who is Pheapimex?
The director of Pheapimex Group is an Oknha1 and senator in the ruling Cambodian Peoples Party. The company
shares offices with Pheapimex Fu Chan Cambodia Co. Inc., at 17 Wat Langkar Street in Phnom Penh. The
senator is also a director of Shukaku Inc., which is currently filling Boeung Kak Lake in Phnom Penh. Shukaku
was granted a 99-year concession to develop 133 hectares around the lake, where an estimated 4,225 families
face eviction.2
Due to weak disclosure regulations on shareholders in Cambodia, it is unclear who else is involved in
Pheapimex and the extent of its ties to senior members of the government. The senators wife reportedly helps
run Pheapimex. She also is a member of the Cambodian Red Cross run by the wife of the Prime Minister.
Reports note that Pheapimex first came to prominence as a logging concessionaire in the 1990s, but in recent
years diversified into other activities including hydro electric dams and mining.
1 Oknha is a title given to any generous person who contributes $100,000 to the state, either in cash or materials.
2 Economic Land Concessions in Cambodia: A Human Rights Perspective, UN Cambodia Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights November 2004.available at: http://cambodia.ohchr.org/report_subject.aspx
Further information: UN Special Representative of the Secretary General for Human Rights in Cambodia, Land concessions for economic purposes in Cambodia: ahuman r ights perspective, November 2004, available at: http://cambodia.ohchr.org/report_subject.aspx
The Pulp Invasion: The international pulp and paper industry in the Mekong Region . World Rainforest Movement bulletin No 58, May, 2002.
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Village chief Touch Ly was arrested on April 28, 2009 after being called to ameeting at the Ministry of Inter ior. She was charged with falsifying information
after assisting residents of her village certify a petition in a land dispute with a
company owned by the wife of a minister.
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30 Forced Evictions and Intimidation in Cambodia
On the edges of the massive nine-year-old Pheapimex
concession, smaller companies have nibbled away from time
to time at local residents land. One old dispute blew up
again just after Khmer New Year 2009, resulting in the arrest
of a woman from La Peang village in Kampong Chhnang
who was sent to the Prey Sar prison in Phnom Penh after
helping her neighbors thumb-print a letter attesting to the
loss of their land.
The arrest of La Peang village chief Touch Ly, 48, came
when she was called from her province to Phnom Penh for
a meeting at the Ministry of Interior on April 28, 2009.
She had helped certify a letter in a land dispute with KDC
International Company, which claims about 600 hectares of
land in the area.
KDC is owned by the wife of a government minister. She
is also a member of the Cambodian Red Cross, run by the
wife of the prime minister.
Mrs. Ly was arrested at the Ministry of Interior, taken
to Phnom Penh Municipal Court, charged with falsifying
information, and put in prison, according to human rightsinvestigators.
Human rights groups condemned the arrest, which they
said follows a pattern of intimidation and misuse of the
courts that is increasingly common in land cases.
Human rights investigators said they believed that the
municipal court had no jurisdiction to arrest Mrs. Ly, and
that investigators went to the village to check the names ofthe people on the petition and found that they were correct.
One NGO planned to provide the woman with an attorney
to contest the courts jurisdiction, an investigator with that
group said.
According to media reports, the dispute has its roots in
the late 1990s when the village chief in Ta Ches village, on
behalf of a business